Rice Presses North Korean Envoy On Nukes
Secretary Of State Delivers "Very Strong Message" On Nuclear Verification In First Top-Level Meeting In 4 Years
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Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice walks with Singapore's Foreign Minister George Yeo prior to her meeting with Southeast Asian foreign ministers and top officials at the ASEAN Ministerial Meeting in Singapore, July 23, 2008. (AP Photo/Dita Alangkara)
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U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, left, sits with Singapore's Foreign Minister George Yeo during a bilateral meeting on the sidelines of the ASEAN Ministerial Meetings, July 23, 2008 in Singapore. (AP Photo/Wong Maye-E, POOL)
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Rice said she and the foreign ministers of four other nations at Wednesday's gathering would press North Korea to prove it is telling the truth about its past atomic activities as part of an international effort to get it to abandon nuclear weapons.
Diplomats have said they expect the North's foreign minister to present his country's position on a proposal to verify it has disabled its nuclear facilities.
Rice was hoping to gauge North Korea's commitment to efforts to get the country to abandon its nuclear weapons programs during her meeting with Foreign Minister Pak Ui Chun on the sidelines of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations annual security forum in Singapore.
North Korea has been given a four-page draft document detailing what the United States says it must do to prove it has told the truth about its past atomic programs, a key element in the six-nation denuclearization initiative.
Diplomats expect Pak to provide at least an initial response to the proposal at the meeting with Rice and the foreign ministers of the other four nations involved: China, Japan, South Korea and Russia.
"It will give some indication of the amount of effort the North Koreans have put into completing this verification protocol," the chief U.S. negotiator to the nuclear talks, Christopher Hill, said late Tuesday.
The draft calls for intrusive inspections of North Korean nuclear facilities, soil sampling, interviews with key scientists and a role for U.N. atomic experts. Hill travels on Friday to the International Atomic Energy Agency headquarters in Vienna to brief them on developments.
The proposal was presented to the North Koreans earlier this month by Hill and representatives of the other four nations pushing the denuclearization effort.
Hill said the goal is to reach a formal agreement on the document by mid-August after negotiations on the fine points, some of which the North Koreans have already objected to.
"They made some preliminary comments and indicated some problems with it," he said. "But we have to see what their considered comments back from the capital are."
South Korea's main nuclear envoy Kim Sook said Tuesday that: "The ball is actually in the North Korean court because they already received the draft of the verification protocol."
It has to be a verification protocol that can give us confidence.
Secretary of State Condoleezza RiceVerification is expected to take months to complete and the administration of President Bush is eager to make quick progress in its last six months in office.
Officials, including Rice, who will be meeting a North Korean foreign minister for the first time, have played down chances of any breakthrough at Wednesday's meeting, which has been organized by China as an informal session.
Chinese Foreign Minister Yang Jiechi said, though, that the gathering "will be very good for advancing the agenda of the talks."
Rice says she plans to deliver "a very strong message" that the process "really needs to be completed, and that it has to be a verification protocol that can give us confidence."
She has refused to describe the meeting as an historic or landmark event, it will be the Bush administration's highest-level contact since 2004 with North Korea, a charter member of the president's "axis of evil."
It comes amid positive developments in the six-nation effort to get the North to denuclearize. The campaign began in 2003, but then stalled and gained steam only after Pyongyang detonated an atomic device in 2006.
In June, North Korea submitted a long-delayed list of its nuclear programs involving plutonium, but it did not include details about nuclear weapons, an alleged uranium enrichment program and possible nuclear proliferation with country's such as Syria.
Rice made clear that those concerns still have to be addressed if progress is to continue. "We (need) a way to address proliferation as well as all nuclear programs, including highly enriched uranium," she said.
Still in return for its steps, Washington announced it would remove the North from its terrorism blacklist and relaxed some economic sanctions on the communist nation. That led Pyongyang to blow up the cooling tower at its main nuclear reactor.
© MMVIII, CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
Best-selling author Mitch Albom on his first nonfiction work since "Tuesdays with Morrie."





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See all 28 Comments"it''''s just you Posted by jamesm12341"
jamesm12341 it''s just you, not Tawpdawg11.
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Posted by rharrin1 at 06:29 AM : Jul 23, 2008
Interesting consept, disturbing image, yukkkk!
They eat Rice in that part of the world.
Posted by brianbwb at 05:58 AM : Jul 23, 2008
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Well, thanks for reporting this in your post!
I read the news everyday, and I hadn''t heard this!
However, I''m not surprised, though. It''s typical Bush administration tactics: promise something, lie about it, and renege on your promise(s)!
It''s why Bush & co. can''t be trusted and why America is so hated around the world!
Please explain to your overseas associates that the average American is unaware of these things because it''s not reported to them by the media---because most of it isn''t!
No it is not just you.
Over here in Singapore, the news media reports that the North Koreans are unhappy with the lack of promised reciprocity. After shutting down their reactors, and demolishing the cooling towers and preparing to allow inspections, the US has reneged on its part of the deal, and not one of the US sanctions has been lifted.
So now North Korea is demanding not only that the US honor it''s part of the bargain, they now call for the US to lift all sanctions.
This is the bit the news services don''t tell Americans.
No it is not just you.
Over here in Singapore, the news media reports that the North Koreans are unhappy with the lack of promised reciprocity. After shutting down their reactors, and demolishing the cooling towers and preparing to allow inspections, the US has reneged on its part of the deal, and not one of the US sanctions has been lifted.
So now North Korea is demanding not only that the US honor it''s part of the bargain, they now call for the US to lift all sanctions.
This is the bit the news services don''t tell Americans.
Posted by lazareth at 05:24 AM : Jul 23, 2008
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Must be that gap in her teeth.
http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2008/jul/09/us-exports-to-iran-grew-tenfold-under-bush/
Can the Bush Administration get their election year scare tactics right? Maybe it''s really the ghost of Saddam Hussein that we''re supposed to be afraid of so we''ll vote for McCain?
Posted by lazareth
Remember how mean Kim Jung Ill was in Team America?
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